Events from the year 1873 in the United States .
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Schuyler Colfax (R -Indiana ) (until March 4)
Henry Wilson (R -Massachusetts ) (starting March 4)
More information Governors and lieutenant governors ...
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama : David P. Lewis (Republican )
Governor of Arkansas : Ozra Amander Hadley (Republican ) (until January 6), Elisha Baxter (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of California : Newton Booth (Republican )
Governor of Connecticut : Marshall Jewell (Republican ) (until May 7), Charles R. Ingersoll (Democratic ) (starting May 7)
Governor of Delaware : James Ponder (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : Harrison Reed (Republican ) (until January 7), Ossian B. Hart (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Governor of Georgia : James M. Smith (Democratic )
Governor of Illinois :
Governor of Indiana : Conrad Baker (Republican ) (until January 13), Thomas A. Hendricks (Democratic ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Iowa : Cyrus C. Carpenter (Republican )
Governor of Kansas : James M. Harvey (Republican ) (until January 13), Thomas A. Osborn (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Kentucky : Preston H. Leslie (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana :
Governor of Maine : Sidney Perham (Republican )
Governor of Maryland : William Pinkney Whyte (Democratic ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Massachusetts : William Claflin (Republican ) (until January 4), William B. Washburn (Republican ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Michigan : Henry P. Baldwin (Republican ) (until January 1), John J. Bagley (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of Minnesota : Horace Austin (Republican )
Governor of Mississippi : Ridgley C. Powers (Republican )
Governor of Missouri : B. Gratz Brown (Liberal Republican ) (until January 3), Silas Woodson (Democratic ) (starting January 3)
Governor of Nebraska : William H. James (Republican ) (until January 13), Robert Wilkinson Furnas (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Nevada : Lewis R. Bradley (Democratic )
Governor of New Hampshire : Ezekiel A. Straw (Republican )
Governor of New Jersey : Joel Parker (Democratic )
Governor of New York : John Adams Dix (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of North Carolina : Tod Robinson Caldwell (Republican )
Governor of Ohio : Edward F. Noyes (Republican )
Governor of Oregon : La Fayette Grover (Democratic )
Governor of Pennsylvania : John W. Geary (Republican ) (until January 21), John F. Hartranft (Republican ) (starting January 21)
Governor of Rhode Island : Seth Padelford (Republican ) (until May 27), Henry Howard (Republican ) (starting May 27)
Governor of South Carolina : Franklin I. Moses, Jr. (Republican )
Governor of Tennessee : John C. Brown (Democratic )
Governor of Texas : Edmund J. Davis (Republican )
Governor of Vermont : Julius Converse (Republican )
Governor of Virginia : Gilbert Carlton Walker (Democratic )
Governor of West Virginia : John J. Jacob (Democratic )/(Independent )
Governor of Wisconsin : Cadwallader C. Washburn (Republican )
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Alexander McKinstry (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas : vacant (until January 6), Volney V. Smith (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of California : Romualdo Pacheco (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : Morris Tyler (Republican ) (until May 7), George G. Sill (Republican ) (starting May 7)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida : Samuel T. Day (Republican ) (until month and day unknown), Marcellus Stearns (Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois :
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : William Cumback (Republican ) (until January 13), Leonidas Sexton (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : Henry C. Bulis (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : Peter Percival Elder (Republican ) (until January 13), Elias Sleeper Stover (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : John G. Carlisle (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana :
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Joseph Tucker (political party unknown) (until month and day unknown), Thomas Talbot (political party unknown) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : Morgan Bates (Republican ) (until month and day unknown), Henry H. Holt (Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : William H. Yale (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : Alexander K. Davis (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : vacant (until January 3), Charles Phillip Johnson (Liberal Republican ) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Frank Denver (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of New York : John C. Robinson (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : vacant (until month and day unknown), Curtis Hooks Brogden (Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : Jacob Mueller (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Charles Cutler (political party unknown) (until May 27), Charles C. Van Zandt (political party unknown) (starting May 27)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : Richard Howell Gleaves (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : John C. Vaughn (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), A. T. Lacey (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : Russell S. Taft (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : John Lawrence Marye, Jr. (Conservative)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : Milton H. Pettit (Republican ) (until March 23), vacant (starting March 23)
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January–March
March 4: Henry Wilson becomes the 18th U.S. vice president
July–September
July 21 – At Adair, Iowa , Jesse James and the James-Younger Gang pull off the first successful train robbery in the American West (US$3,000 from the Rock Island Express).
August 4 – Indian Wars : While protecting a railroad survey party in Montana , the Seventh Cavalry , under Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer , clashes for the first time with the Sioux , near the Tongue River (only 1 man on each side is killed).
September 6 – Regular cable car service begins on Clay Street , San Francisco .
September 17 – The Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, later Ohio State University , opens its doors with 25 students, including 2 women.
September 18 – The New York stock market crash triggers the Panic of 1873 , part of the Long Depression .
January 2 – John M. Robsion , U.S. Senator from Kentucky in 1930 (died 1948 )
January 4 – Blanche Walsh , stage and screen actress (died 1915 )
January 8 – Grace Van Studdiford , stage actress and opera singer (died 1927 )
January 9 – Thomas Curtis , hurdler (died 1944 )
February 4 – Joel R. P. Pringle , admiral (died 1932 )
February 11 – Louis Charles Christopher Krieger , mycologist (died 1940 )
March 3 – William Green , labor leader (died 1952 )
March 5 – Thomas Harrison Montgomery, Jr. , zoologist and cell biologist (died 1912 )
March 29 – Billy Quirk , silent film actor (died 1926 )
April 7 – John McGraw , baseball player and manager (died 1934 )
April 13 – John W. Davis , politician, diplomat and lawyer (died 1955 )
May 5 – Leon Czolgosz , assassin of President William McKinley (executed 1901 )
May 9
April 22 – Ellen Glasgow , novelist (died 1945 )
July 6 – Ethel Sands , painter (died 1962 in the United Kingdom )
July 11 – Nat M. Wills , vaudeville entertainer (died 1917 )
August 3 – Alexander Posey , Native American poet, journalist, humorist and politician (drowned 1908 )
August 5 – Joseph Russell Knowland , politician and newspaperman (died 1966 )
August 10 – William Ernest Hocking , philosopher (died 1966)
August 11 – J. Rosamond Johnson , African American composer and singer (died 1954 )
August 17 – John A. Sampson , gynecologist (died 1946 )
August 18 – Otto Harbach , lyricist (died 1963 )
August 21 – Harry T. Morey , stage and screen actor (died 1936 )
August 25 – Blanche Bates , stage and screen actress (died 1941 )
August 26 – Lee de Forest , inventor (died 1961 )
September 2 – Bessie Van Vorst , campaigning journalist (died 1928 )
September 5 – Cornelius Vanderbilt III , military officer, inventor and engineer (died 1942 )
September 8 – David O. McKay , president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (died 1970 )
September 14 – Josiah Bailey , U.S. Senator from North Carolina from 1931 to 1946 (died 1946)
September 21 – Papa Jack Laine , New Orleans brass band leader (died 1966 )
October 2 – Stephen Warfield Gambrill , U.S. Congressman for Maryland's 5th District (died 1924 )
October 3 – Emily Post , etiquette expert (died 1960 )
October 8 – Ma Barker , née Kate Clark, matriarch of the Barker–Karpis gang (killed 1935 )
October 9 – Charles Rudolph Walgreen , businessman (died 1939 )
October 10 – George Cabot Lodge , poet (died 1909 )
October 14 – Ray Ewry , field athlete (died 1937 )
October 17 – William Luther Hill , U.S. Senator from Florida in 1936 (died 1951 )
October 18 – Harris Laning , admiral (died 1941)
October 19 – Bart King , cricketer (died 1965 )
October 29 – Lester J. Dickinson , U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1931 to 1937 (died 1968 )
November 10 – David Lynn , architect, Architect of the Capitol from 1923 to 1954 (died 1961 )
November 16 – W. C. Handy , African American composer, "father of the Blues" (died 1958)
November 28 – Frank Phillips , oil executive (died 1950 )
December 7 – Willa Cather , novelist (died 1947 )
December 12 – Lola Ridge , poet (died 1941)
December 30 – Al Smith , politician (died 1944)
Undated – Thomas Chrostwaite , educator (died 1958)
February 1 – Matthew Fontaine Maury , oceanographer (born 1806 )
March 4 – Alfred Iverson, Sr. , U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1855 to 1861 (born 1798 )
March 10 – John Torrey , botanist (born 1796 )
March 27 – James Dixon , U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1857 to 1869 (born 1814 )
March 31 – Hugh Maxwell , lawyer and politician (born 1787 )
April 11 – Edward Canby , general (born 1817 )
May 7 – Salmon P. Chase , 6th Chief Justice of the United States , 25th United States Secretary of the Treasury (born 1808 )
May 9 – Frederick Goddard Tuckerman , poet (born 1821 )
June 11 – Richard Saltonstall Rogers , shipping merchant and politician (born 1790 )
October 5 – William Todd , businessman and Canadian senate nominee (born 1803 )
November 9 – Stephen Mallory , U.S. Senator from Florida from 1851 to 1861 (born 1812 )
November 27 – Richard Yates , U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1865 to 1871 (born 1815 )
December 14 – Louis Agassiz , geologist and zoologist (born 1807 in Switzerland)
December 24 – Johns Hopkins , entrepreneur and benefactor (born 1795 )
"Lumber Industry." Encyclopedia of American History . Answers Corporation, 2006.
"Lumber Industry." Encyclopedia of American History . Answers Corporation, 2006.